Downton Bishops Palace
Has been described as a Possible Palace (Bishop)
There are no visible remains
Name | Downton Bishops Palace |
Alternative Names | The Old Court; King John's Stables |
Historic Country | Wiltshire |
Modern Authority | Wiltshire |
1974 Authority | Wiltshire |
Civil Parish | Downton |
Possible Bishops palace documented during early C13. It is thought to have been situated on the west bank of the River Avon. Excavations in 1957 located part of a Medieval wall. Building material was also dredged from the river in 1962. (PastScape)
"It is probable that, as early as the 13th C, the Bishop and his lessees inhabited a building of considerable extent on the western bank of the river called in ancient deeds the Old Court; of which scattered vestiges remained in the memory of some of the present inhabitants". "A special court was held in the house called the Old Court June 2nd 1578" (Hoare)
A Medieval wall trench running from east to west (SU 1781 2126) was revealed in 1957, when Rahtz dug a trial hole in a field known locally as Old Court (and also King John's Palace and the Bishop's Palace) (WANHM 1891-3; 1965)
Large blocks of greensand stone, including a carved stone with a 12/13th C, decorated capital, suggestive of a substantial building in the near vicinity were dredged from the river Avon in 1962. Information from workmen engaged on the site disclosed that a short length of flint wall had been found and that the blocks of stone had come from the river or the extreme edge of the island fronting the river (Musty 1966). (PastScape)
Henry de Blois episcopal castle, The Moot was demolished in 1155 and never seemed to recover; was this a replacement on a new site?
Creighton writes that "the distinct possibility that the castle was conceived as an appendage to an extant archiepiscopal (sic) palace site, and thus represented the temporary transfer of functions to a fortified nucleus as opposed to the creation of a new seat of Lordship."
It is known that by the later 11th century an episcopal residence stood at Downton (Elrington 1980), and documentary and historical evidence has identified the site at Old Court, just west of The Moot, as the location – a premise confirmed by archaeological research which also discovered that the site had probably been bisected by a Post-medieval mill stream. The 1734 estate map of Joseph Windham shows standing walls marked 'The Ruins' on an island created by the mill stream, but cannot be trusted for accuracy. The size of such a site has been estimated (based upon the body of recorded sites) at between 0.5ha and 3ha (English Heritage 1990, Magnates' Residences (Medieval). Monuments Protection Programme, Single Monuments Class Description.). (Mcmahon p. 13)
Not scheduled
Not Listed
Historic England (PastScape) Defra or Monument number(s)
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid Reference | SU178212 |
Latitude | 50.9904098510742 |
Longitude | -1.74759995937347 |
Eastings | 417810 |
Northings | 121260 |